Smoked, Honey-Glazed Ham

Pig hunters are faced with a conundrum: We hunt to eat the pigs (or at least most of us do), and we all dearly love prosciutto and other hams (again, at least most of us do), but the problem is you can’t keep the skin on wild pigs unless you can somehow set up a place to scald and scrape a wild hog. And that ain’t gonna happen unless you are very, very lucky.

What to do?

Make other hams. The traditional Easter ham rarely has skin on it, after all, and it’s a cooked ham to boot so it’s easy to make if you have a smoker. If you want to make this ham for Easter Sunday, you’ll need to start a couple days ahead of time. This ham is cured, then smoked and glazed with honey.

Consider this a baseline recipe. You can scale it up or down, depending on the size of the ham. Cure time is about 12 hours per pound of meat for a light cure, 24 hours per pound for a more traditional ham cure. Smoking is also variable.

I’d say you need at least 2 hours to get even a light smoke on, and you can go all day if you like it smoky. Wood’s also your call: I prefer fruit woods here, but nut woods or oak or alder or mesquite would work, too.

You can play with the sweetener as well. I chose honey, but brown sugar is more traditional, and you could use molasses, maple syrup, birch syrup, agave nectar or some fruit syrup. Whatever floats your boat.

Finally, how do you eat it? Sliced, like on Easter Sunday, or cold, as sandwich meat, which I prefer. This recipe makes killer cold cuts.

You will need to get your hands on curing salt for this recipe, otherwise it won’t be a ham — the curing salt provides that rosy color and “ham” flavor you’re looking for. I use Instacure No. 1, which you can buy online or in good butcher shops.

Also, this recipe requires time. Curing time and smoking time. Also, when the ham is ready, let it rest for a solid 15 minutes before you slice into it. It’s actually just as good cold. Once made, your hams should keep for a week to 10 days in the fridge, and they freeze well if vacuum sealed or tightly wrapped.

If you feel like it, go ahead and stick cloves in the ham like you would with an Easter ham. I never did like this too much, so I didn’t.

5 from 2 votes

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Honey Glazed Ham

Prep Time

15mins

Cook Time

4hrs

Total Time

4hrs15mins

I do this with the large muscle group on the back of the ham, which would be a rump roast in a cow or a culatello in Italian charcuterie. But the exact cut isn't as important as just a big ole' hunk of hind leg. I am using a wild pig here, but domesticated pork is fine, as would hams from a bear.

Course: Cured Meat

Cuisine: American

Serves: 2hams

Author: Hank Shaw

Ingredients

1or 2 skinless hams,each about 2 to 4 pounds

1/2cupkosher salt

1/2cupsugar

1tablespoonInstacure No. 1

1/2cuphoney

Instructions

Mix the salt, curing salt, sugar and a half-gallon of water until the salt dissolves. Submerge the hams in the brine for 2 to 4 days in the fridge. The longer you brine the hams, the saltier they will be, and the rosier they will get from the cure. For 2 1/2-pound hams I cured for 48 hours and they came out very lightly cured, which I like. If you prefer a more traditional "ham-ier" flavor, go a bit longer.

When you are ready to smoke, take the hams out, pat them dry with paper towels and set them on a wire rack in a cool, breezy place. I put mine on the kitchen table under the ceiling fan with the window open. Let them sit there for 2 to 3 hours, so they can dry a bit and develop the pellicle that helps the surface of the hams take the smoke better. You can also leave them in the fridge uncovered overnight.

Smoke over your favorite wood (I used cherry) for 2 hours, getting the smoker's temperature up to 200°F in this time. Meanwhile, heat the honey in a little pot so it will flow better. At the 2-hour mark, paint the hams with the honey. Paint again every hour until you are done smoking.

You can finish the hams entirely in the smoker, painting with honey every hour until you get an internal temperature of 160°F to 175°F, or you can do what I do, which is to finish the ham in the oven. To do this, I move the hams from the smoker to a preheated 375°F oven, painting them with honey every 20 minutes. I like this better because the final hot temperatures fully cook the ham and the honey caramelizes nicely, which doesn't happen so well at the low temps of the smoker.

Let the hams cool for at least 15 minutes before slicing. Serve warm or cold.

Reader Interactions

Comments

Hank, I have been curing a 7 lb ham for about a week and I am going to smoke it tomorrow. In your directions you say you like it best when finished in the oven. At what point would you transfer from the smoker to the oven? At the 2hr mark? If you were transferring to the oven would you glaze in the smoker at all? Thank you!